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I'd like to bring this meeting to order. It's 8:15 and I see quorum.
We have with us this morning General Jennie Carignan and Lieutenant-General Stephen Kelsey to update us on the mandate and priorities of the chief of the defence staff.
On behalf of the committee, I want to welcome you in particular, General Carignan, and also you, General Kelsey. This is your first time here as the chief and the vice-chief of the defence staff, and we wish you only the best. With that, we also hope that we have a really good working relationship at the committee. I hope you will see this as a friendly location and, hopefully, as a collaborative, constructive committee.
We look forward to what you have to say in the next five minutes, and then we'll go to our rounds of questions. Again, thank you for coming, and congratulations to both of you.
You have your five minutes.
Good morning, everyone.
[English]
This is my first appearance as the chief of the defence staff, and I want to begin by saying how much I value the work of this committee. I appreciate the opportunity to discuss my mandate and priorities for the Canadian Armed Forces. I'm joined today by the vice-chief of the defence staff, Lieutenant-General Stephen Kelsey.
[Translation]
We face a volatile and unpredictable global security environment.
This committee is well aware of the current circumstances, from wars in Ukraine and the Middle East to rising tensions in the Indo‑Pacific region, as well as climate change, disruptive technology and disinformation.
These threats require us to be vigilant and forward‑thinking in the way that we approach defence.
[English]
We need to acknowledge that although from a defence and security perspective we have benefited from our geography in the past, the situation is changing, and we now have to transform our military to face expanding global threats, with our allies and partners.
I've had the privilege of serving alongside the members of the Canadian Armed Forces for the past 38 years, and now I have the privilege of leading them. They are skilled, courageous and dedicated beyond measure. Supporting and caring for our people must continue to be our top priority, and I'm committed to building on the work of my predecessors. That means focusing on the three R's: recruitment, retention and readiness.
[Translation]
Many of our allies face these issues as well. We need to get our forces back to full strength within five years. This is vital.
To do this, we need to continue modernizing how we recruit and whom we recruit. That means improving our processes without lowering our standards.
This means making a big push to recruit Canadians from all backgrounds, including opening the door to more permanent residents.
[English]
Diversity makes us more operationally effective, and we know that what worked in the past is not what will work in the future. We can't continue relying on the same thinking, the same mindset and the same processes or methodology, and we need to bring in new broader perspectives, approaches and ideas if we are going to solve the complex challenges of today and tomorrow.
On retention, we've stopped the downward trend and stabilized our numbers. We are making progress, but there's more to do. When we uphold the highest standards of conduct and performance, where our people can grow and thrive both professionally and personally, not only do we attract the best and the brightest, but we will also keep them as members of the forces.
We also need to be ready, always and for anything. Readiness is a constant, and it is a must.
[Translation]
The world is in a state of transition, and the same is true for the Canadian Forces. Outcomes aren't guaranteed. We must be comfortable with being uncomfortable.
[English]
Readiness means having a stronger and more diverse foundation of personnel with the required and relevant capabilities that meet the future of warfare, with the willingness to innovate, adapt and take risks, and it means collaborating with our allies and partners around the world.
[Translation]
This is particularly true when it comes to defending North America alongside the United States, both through the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, and more generally through the collaboration of our Canadian Joint Operations Command and the United States Northern Command.
[English]
As you know, global interest in the Arctic is growing, including from our competitors and our adversaries, so we must be diligent in protecting and asserting Canadian sovereignty in the north.
I visited NORAD headquarters this week and saw first-hand how Canadian military members work seamlessly with their U.S. colleagues 24-7 to defend our shared continent. We need to continue to work closely through NORAD to detect, to deter and to defend against aerospace threats, and beyond NORAD, through our joint operations command and with U.S. NORTHCOM to monitor our combined maritime approaches.
For example, this past July, NORAD fighter jets from Canada and from the United States intercepted Russian and Chinese aircraft in international airspace near Alaska. In the same month, HMCS Regina shadowed a Chinese polar research vessel in the Bering Strait. As always, we must ensure our intercepts are carried out safely and professionally.
Mr. Chair, I know none of this is easy. We are transforming the Canadian Armed Forces while also fulfilling our growing obligations. That's like building and flying an airplane at the same time. We know what our challenges are, and we know what we need to do. I believe deeply in this institution and in what it stands for.
We will continue tackling this work with determination and resolve, and we will get it done.
Thank you. We are happy to take your questions.
Congratulations, General Carignan, on your appointment as CDS.
Welcome to you as well, General Kelsey. Welcome to the position.
I'm looking forward to our ongoing productive relationship.
Your predecessors have always talked very plainly and bluntly with the committee in explaining the threat environment that we're facing and the readiness of the Canadian Armed Forces. You mentioned your three R's: retention, recruitment and readiness. Let's drill down on that.
The last time General Eyre appeared here, he was talking about being 16,000 troops short of where we need to be at full strength, and there are a further 10,000 members of the Canadian Armed Forces who are undertrained and undeployable.
Do you have an update on those numbers? Where are we today on how short we are and on how unprepared some of our members are?
In terms of regular forces members, we are now at 63,622, and in reserve forces there are 29,176, for a total of 92,798. That was as of August 31.
The numbers do vary on a daily basis, but overall, when we are looking at our numbers and at the rate of attrition, we are at a fairly balanced number for this past year. This year, we are looking at recruiting to our maximum number of 6,400. We are currently at 2,400 in terms of recruitment, with another 1,000 who have been made an offer to join. We are roughly halfway within our strategic intake targets this year, and we're tracking in that area.
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We had Professor Rob Huebert here on Tuesday. He said that the state of military readiness in Canada hasn't been at this low a level since 1938, going into World War II.
You talked about readiness. We've talked about resources. The human resource is one side of that, and we're still short of brave women and men who serve in the Canadian Armed Forces. We need more great Canadians to step up and serve, but you're also dealing with a budget cut.
According to the numbers from the parliamentary library and the analysts we have at committee here, the actual expenditures under the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces are now under 1% of GDP at 0.95%, and you're dealing with a budget cut, which General Eyre just said was more than challenging: It was essentially undermining the ability for the armed forces to maintain a level of readiness.
We're hearing stories about budget cuts impacting the maintenance and overhaul of military equipment and the ability to deploy that equipment, and we're also seeing the amount of training activity on the decline. Can you comment on how that budget is impacting day-to-day operations?
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I was going to offer you my time if you wanted it.
Continuing on the issue of recruitment, the problem doesn't seem to be people not wanting to join. My understanding is that last year we had 70,000-plus applicants, and only about 4,000 were accepted. With PRs, 21,000 applied, and something like 70 were accepted.
You talked about not lowering standards, but what kinds of astronomical standards do we have that we're turning down 66,000 of 70,000 applicants, or they're just not getting through the process? What's the problem? What are we looking for that these people don't have?
Someone who knew something about the system and the recruiting suggested that the problem was that every time some new problem comes up with somebody in the military, they add another requirement in terms of recruitment. As a result, over the years we've added on requirement after requirement, so now it's so difficult to get people to pass all these requirements. What do you think of that statement?
Number two is that I was also told that there is a four A's requirement, that if you have asthma, allergies, ADHD or anxiety, you don't qualify. It seems to me that this would exclude a whole lot of people who would be exceedingly qualified. For example, with regard to asthma, two or three of my six kids have asthma, but they had asthma as kids. They hardly ever have asthma anymore. It's not really an issue. However, the army would seemingly say that, no, they don't qualify, even though they might be stellar candidates.
So, I have two questions. The first is about too many requirements, and the second is about the medical requirements and the possibility of easing them.
:
Thank you for the question.
First, I just want to emphasize that we're spending every penny wisely. Of course, the armed forces are facing pressure related to training. However, it's all part of balancing force generation, recruit preparation and the training system.
The issue concerns operational readiness, personnel and the recruitment system. A person will undergo basic training and more advanced training afterwards.
The commander of the army wants much more money for training. However, it's a capacity issue. Of course, training is lacking in certain parts of the army. As the chief of the defence staff said, the priority is obviously recruitment and the ongoing process of preparing personnel. It's a continuum. The beginning matters, but so does the rest. We need to invest in non‑commissioned officers, leaders and young officers to ensure that the process continues.
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I want to thank the member of Parliament for the question.
[English]
This is, of course, a priority area for us, because professional conduct in our organizational culture creates cohesive and combat-effective teams that can then be sent out to do some pretty difficult things in pretty difficult situations.
This is why our chief of professional conduct and culture will continue in terms of implementing our strategy and the various initiatives that are ongoing regarding management of complaints and grievances while ensuring we have a responsive system in that way. It's also using conflict as a way to build our teams. As we know, with over 125,000 people within defence, conflicts are happening. We want to make sure people can resolve and navigate conflict in a respectful manner.
Those efforts are a top priority, and they are currently ongoing via the chief professional conduct and culture and across our services, which are implementing, as well, their own initiatives to create strong and cohesive teams.
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The housing and accommodation issues for our personnel are a key point for us. It's extremely important. Having been moved more than 13 times, if my count is correct, we understand the need to provide proper support for our folks, who we are asking to serve and to move regularly as part of their duties.
We do understand the need, and we understand as well that the housing issues are also lived and experienced by Canadians overall, but we are putting forward many initiatives to facilitate housing and enable our members to be more mobile. Currently, we have a few things ongoing. We need to understand that we currently operate 11,700 residential houses in 27 different locations for our members. We are building 1,400 new homes over the next five years on various bases. We are renovating 2,500 units as well, to maintain our residential homes in good condition over many different bases across Canada.
This is also layered with benefits for our folks. The needs are very different depending on the families and their personal situations, so it's a layered approach. Not all members require the same types of supports as we are asking them to serve. We have the Canadian Forces housing differential as well. That has been implemented to enable our folks to move, and 28,000 CAF members are actually benefiting from it.
Not everything is perfect. We understand the difficulties that our members are encountering, but we are regularly gathering the feedback, understanding the experience and consistently striving at improving that situation for all of our members.
I was wondering.... Sometimes it's hard for people to think about this in terms of the number of housing units. When we think about those 11,000 units, I think I saw in the DPU that we were short 7,000—around 7,000, usually 6,000 or 7,000—and there's $295 million earmarked to be spent, I think, up until 2032-33. That works out to about $1,800 per housing unit over that span of time.
When you think about that amount of money to build and to do 2,500 renos, and if we're short 6,000 units, does the government need to think about allocating more money to housing? Is that a way in which we can raise morale in the forces and a fairly low-cost way of doing it? At a time when we need the most out of our people, can we spend our money on our people? In the DPU, there were 36 recommendations, and 25% of them had to do with HR. To me, this is a key one.
Like I said, we need the most out of our people. Is this a great way to target that?
Welcome, Generals, to the committee.
General Carignan, I'd like to start with Ukraine first. Everyone's watching with interest where the U.S. is right now. It's going through its own election process. President Biden, I think, is poised today to provide more support for Ukraine with additional weapons and resources.
There are two different positions south of the border. We've heard President Trump talking about ending the conflict prior to his swearing in, if he wins. His vice-presidential nominee has been very blunt about his opposition to the war in Ukraine and providing U.S. support for it.
That same debate is certainly going to happen here when we go through our own election. There are different positions that our parties have here. We've been very clear in our support. There is one party that hasn't supported Ukraine and has ceased support when it comes to providing resources to the Ukrainians. Canadians will have an opportunity, just as the Americans have in the U.S., to comment on where they stand on it.
It leads me to the question of why we should care. I'm not going to ask you about the politics here in Canada or south of the border, but governments are providing support to Ukraine because it matters. Some might say it's a “faraway foreign land”, but what happens in Ukraine and what Russia is doing in Ukraine matter to Canadians, and they matter to many other parts of the world.
Can you relate to the committee and share with us why Ukraine matters and why the support for Ukraine matters?
It becomes increasingly hard to justify and rationalize support for Ukraine with constituents sometimes, because of what they read on social media. You mentioned in your opening remarks the challenges we have with disinformation. As a government, we deal with disinformation as well on all topics, whether it's climate change, support for Ukraine or other important issues that Canadians face.
Your predecessor was very clear about the threat that disinformation poses, not just to the Canadian Armed Forces and to our society but to our democratic institutions. That is wrapped up in that whole question related to Ukraine, and I receive it, unfortunately, on a regular basis from all parts of Canada. I try to relay to my constituents, from an educational perspective, that some of what they read on social media isn't true and is coming from foreign adversaries.
Can you talk about the challenges you face in your new position and how you plan to address those issues, whether they're related to Ukraine or otherwise?
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We're going to have to leave it there. Thank you, Madame Lambropoulos.
Generals Carignan and Kelsey, on behalf of the committee, I want to thank you.
However, before I let you go, you can see there is a lot of interest, on the part of all the parties and of all the members, around recruitment and around how we're going to get there. I wonder, when you go back to your offices, if you could reflect on those questions and, if you will, sketch out the five-year plan to get there, because, as I understand the back-and-forth, it only brings us up to a previous standard of readiness and capability. The world is changing very quickly, as you appreciated in the last question and as you appreciated in your opening remarks. I think the committee would benefit from a point summary of how we're going to get from where we are to where we need to be, and maybe we could have some discussion about whether where we need to be is actually close enough to where we need to be.
I'm assuming from the nodding that is going on around the table here that if you could undertake to do that, it would be appreciated.
Again, this has been a really good start to what I hope is an ongoing dialogue. Everyone at this table has a sincere interest in making sure that our forces are as ready and as able as they can be.
I see a hand popping up.
Good morning, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
It is my great pleasure to be invited once again to share my views on the latest situation in the Taiwan Strait. I last appeared at this committee in September 2023, and the situation has been evolving and changing ever since.
In January of this year, Taiwan held its eighth direct presidential election. Mr. Lai Ching-te of the Democratic Progressive Party won the election and took office on May 20. The people of Taiwan elected a president from the same political party for the third consecutive term and formed a new Legislative Yuan, which is our parliament, with no single party holding an absolute majority. This new political landscape is a testament to the will of our people: a democratic triumph achieved amid notable challenges, particularly the political pressure and foreign interference from China.
In the wake of the election, China seems to have stepped up interference in seeking to create a political stalemate in Taiwan. Shortly after the elections, China escalated its pressure by luring the Republic of Nauru, an island state in the Pacific, to cut diplomatic ties with Taiwan, and arbitrarily altered flight routes in the Taiwan Strait. Following the presidential inauguration on May 20, China conducted so-called punitive drills around Taiwan. Since then, Chinese warplanes and warships have been intruding into our ADIZ and nearby waters, sometimes crossing the median line of the Taiwan Strait—a provocative move equally familiar to our neighbouring countries.
Nevertheless, facing the intensified political and military threats, we have exercised self-restraint and shown resolve to safeguard our democracy, peace and stability.
In our commitment to maintaining peace and stability, we have secured domestic consensus to reform our national defence system, extended mandatory military service to one year and increased our 2025 defence budget to 2.6% of GDP. It demonstrates our determination to strengthen self-defence and our belief that peace can be maintained only through strength.
In our commitment to protecting shared values, we dedicated ourselves to fortifying democratic alliances for collective deterrence. Since this year, we have seen public statements from the U.S., Japan, the G7, the European Union, NATO and Quad, all emphasizing the importance of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait. Notably, the Canada-Australia defence relationship joint statement, as well as Canada's recently released defence report, have both echoed this sentiment.
Unfortunately, despite our self-restraint, we have encountered mounting Chinese pressure to exclude us from participating in international organizations. China, by distorting UN Resolution 2758 in line with its one China principle, has used it as a legal basis to further isolate Taiwan. In fact, Resolution 2758 does not mention Taiwan, does not address the political status of Taiwan, does not establish PRC sovereignty over Taiwan and does not preclude Taiwan from participating in the UN and its agencies.
To sum up, China has recently stepped up misinterpretation of UN Resolution 2758. It is part of China's legal warfare, or “lawfare”, intended not only to prevent Taiwan's international participation but also to justify its potential aggression towards Taiwan in the future. If China is not stopped from distorting UN Resolution 2758, when military conflict happens in the Taiwan Strait it would be illegal for Canada to come and help Taiwan. I call on this committee to heed this critical issue and render support for democratic Taiwan.
Thank you. I'm happy to answer your questions.
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Thank you very much for your question, and thank you for referring back to what I said last year.
Voices: Oh, oh!
Dr. Harry Ho-jen Tseng: I think if there is a difference, it can be seen as an incremental escalation of the threat. In terms of China, there is also one difference, very clearly, from what it was last year. That is the internal difficulties that China is facing today. By that I'm referring not only to economic difficulty, because economic difficulty can quickly switch to fiscal difficulty and social problems, and then to political problems in China. It can escalate very quickly, and that can affect their external behaviour.
I think we need to pay more attention to what's happening in the Indo-Pacific. I think that is exactly what many of the like-minded countries are doing now. I don't know if you have noticed, but in the past 24 hours, Japan, New Zealand and Australia have all sent their naval ships to transit through the Taiwan Strait. This is the first time we've seen that happen. It is the first time New Zealand has sent a naval ship to the Taiwan Strait. You may be surprised that this is also the first time Japan has done this on its own.
We know that we have the support of the world, because the situation there has been the focus of global attention, but we still have much more to do. We cannot afford to be complacent. We must be aware of that.
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That's also a very important question to ask.
When I look at Canada and think about what Canada can do to help Taiwan, I think that what you are already doing, sending your war ships to transit the Taiwan Strait, is very much appreciated. You have already done four transits after the issue of the Indo-Pacific strategy, more than one and a half years ago. That is very important, because the more countries show their intentions to keep the Taiwan Strait as international waters, the high sea, the more China will feel constraint, because China doesn't want to see the Taiwan Strait as international waters.
In terms of Canadian assistance to Taiwan, there are many other non-military approaches that you can render to Taiwan. I don't know if you have noticed, but recently there was a group of former security and defence officers from Canada visiting Taiwan. They came back last weekend and were already interviewed by the CBC program Power & Politics. They see Canada as very timid and very shy in terms of dealing with Taiwan. They were comparing what Canada was doing in those other countries, and in like-minded communities in western countries. There are many things that Canada can do. What was mentioned in that interview was the exchange of high-level visits.
That the and Governor General cannot visit Taiwan is understood, because maybe they carry the symbol of sovereignty. Regarding all the officials under them, there is no reason they cannot visit, because many other countries are doing that. If you can have higher officials visiting Taiwan, that would be very important to the Taiwanese people, because we want to know that we are not alone. Our people want to know that we are standing for a good cause, and that we have the support from like-minded countries. That's very important to us.
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I believe members of this committee know about the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China. This is a cross-country parliamentary alliance reviewing what China is doing in the world and coming up with concerted efforts to safeguard democracy.
At the last meeting in late July in Taipei, it passed a model resolution to urge all those members to go back to their home countries and encourage their colleagues to pass similar resolutions in their respective parliaments. That is very important to us, because what we have read legalistically from UN Resolution 2758 is not what China has portrayed to the world. China has a very clear distortion of this resolution.
As I said in my opening remarks, that legal base should not be taken lightly, because legal warfare, or lawfare, is very important. China cares about its image. The Chinese want the world to know that what they are doing to Taiwan is in accordance with international law, and in their reading of it. We need to know that, in fact, this is entirely not what was stated in UN Resolution 2758. That is not its content.
I don't know if I have more time to explain this resolution; otherwise, I'll stop here.
This resolution was passed in October 1971 and mentioned only two things. It was a very simple, very short resolution.
Number one is to recognize the representative of the PRC as the legal representative of China at the UN. Number two is to expel the representative of Chiang Kai-shek from the seat they unlawfully occupy at the UN.
This is what is mentioned in the very short resolution. It does not mention Taiwan at all. It does not have any bearing on the UN members, and I don't think it sets up a political relationship with Taiwan at all. What I said is that it certainly does not preclude Taiwan from participating in the international organization at all.
Unfortunately, after 1971, when China was recognized by the countries in the world one after the other, the whole world subscribed to how China interpreted the resolution. Now, even more so, China is taking Resolution 2758 as being equivalent to its one China principle.
If you don't stop China from distorting this resolution, you are giving it carte blanche to do whatever it wants to Taiwan. It is a clear distortion of the world order.
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This is a hypothetical question about China's attack on Taiwan: How would it affect Canada? First of all, I think that if we see the like-minded countries in the world as a body, as a family, you probably don't want the values you stand for to be challenged. If you ask this question, you could also ask this question: If Ukraine caved in to Putin, what would happen in Canada?
On the first side, it doesn't seem to cause any change in your life, but I think that's the thin end of the wedge. It can come to you because it is very clear that China's intention is not only Taiwan. If China wants to only deal with Taiwan, they don't need to prepare missiles, with thousands of them deployed on the east and west coasts. With all that range, they can shoot missiles well over Taiwan and reach somewhere else in the world, including your territory. They will not stop at Taiwan.
It is a challenge to the international rule of law; the rules-based international order is what they challenge. You probably don't want that, especially now that we are talking about a geopolitical reality that these countries are not acting alone. They are aligned with their peers. China is working with Russia. In the Ukraine theatre, there's Russia, North Korea, Iran. Now they call it the new axis of evil. There are things like that, so we should not single out any part of the world, especially when China's intention is so well known, and they are trying to dominate all the international organizations and have their way through the international community. You don't want to see that happen. It's a very direct impact on Canada.
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Thank you very much for being here. It's nice to see you.
You mentioned the greater presence of our partners and allies in the Taiwan Strait, and you made a brief reference to Canada's presence. I know there has certainly been an increased presence in the Indo-Pacific region, including in the South China Sea.
Last year, here in Canada, we watched as a Canadian military helicopter, our CH-148 Cyclone, was.... I'll describe this as being “buzzed” by two People's Liberation Army J-11s. It was clear, in our view—and I think in that of those who share our values—that this was an unprofessional and very unsafe activity.
Can you speak to our committee about the impact of this type of behaviour and whether our partners and allies are experiencing the same type of engagement in the region?
Honestly, I think the IPS that Canada issued in November 2022 is a very comprehensive and progressive policy. After all, it is unprecedented in Canada. You never had that kind of policy, one involving so many agencies and things like that. You have a very good road map as to how you want to engage in the Indo-Pacific region.
Canada is also very important in the G7, as well as in NATO. These strengths seem to be not so much perceived by the Canadian people. That is very unfortunate. You shouldn't always see yourself as a medium power. When you say that, you're thinking about the size of your population, but you are a rich country. You are second only to Russia in terms of territory. You are so rich in natural resources. You haven't used all of your assets yet. This is why I think Canada should play a greater leadership role.
If you think your current leadership is not sufficient, you probably shouldn't just complain. You should take up greater leadership in the G7 and NATO and among like-minded countries. In that case, anything between Canada and Taiwan can loom large. I mean, our bilateral relationship would be upgraded to another level.
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We are not too worried about whether China will catch up or supersede Taiwan in terms of the chip manufacturing. As I said, China is still very strong at making the mature node chips, because they already have that supply chain. They already have an internal market of all kinds of electric appliances. They make the mature node chips, and there is a market to use them internally.
At the same time, that kind of chip may be only 50 nanometres, not mature at all, or not as advanced as 7 nanometres or even smaller, but those can be used in weaponry systems. That is the concern, but as I said, they didn't buy U.S. chips. The U.S. passed a law in October 2022—the CHIPS and Science Act—and then mobilized like-minded countries to work together. That is still going on. That effort reflects on the export control.
TSMC and other chip makers in Taiwan are not under the embargo or under the sanction with respect to exporting their chips to China, but those are the chips that China can make anyway, and certainly those more advanced chips that can only be made in Taiwan do not go to China at all.
China, because of this external pressure, is trying to really use the so-called whole-of-government approach to break the bottleneck. They want to have their own very advanced chips. They claim that they are able to make some—like 7-nanometre or 5-nanometre chips—but they are actually talking about making them in a lab.
It's actually a very complicated story, but in fact it's part of their reaction to our presidential election. Our presidential election resulted in the election of the person least welcome by China. They took a series of actions, following our election, to punish Taiwan, and this was one of them. In this unilateral change of the flight routes in the middle of Taiwan Strait, which are already very close to the median line, they now make it even closer, and not only that but there is no southbound. In the Taiwan Strait, there is no southbound route: They actually reactivated another route—M503—in the middle of the Taiwan Strait.
Now, if they fly eastward from the coastal areas to connect to this M503, either to fly northbound or to fly southbound, they are actually coming to the middle of the Taiwan Strait without you being able to discern whether this is a passenger flight or a military warplane. That has already taken half the distance they need to cross the Taiwan Strait, squeezing our air defence zone, so it is very much a national security concern to us.
We brought this up to ICAO. ICAO seems to be unable to find anything to check Chinese behaviour. According to the ICAO regulations, any change of the flight routes should be informed or negotiated priorly with your adjacent FIR—flight information region—and that is Taipei's FIR.
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Every country has its own national interest, but for the Chinese Communist Party, this national interest is actually party interest.
Why is it that invading Taiwan, or why is the rhetoric of invading Taiwan in the interest of the Chinese Communist Party? It's because it needs a reason to show that its rule of China is legitimate. It used to be able to do that by giving the Chinese people economic benefits.
There seems to be an intangible social contract between the party and the Chinese people. It says to the Chinese people, “Forfeit your political rights to us, and the Chinese Communist Party will take care of your political participation and political rights. In return, we give you prosperity.” This is what the Chinese Communist Party has been doing for decades. It actually was able to do that, and it's maybe one reason that corruption in China was so rampant.
This is how it is trying to convince the Chinese people that the Chinese Communist Party will take care of everything politically, but economically, the people get the benefit.
Now that it knows it is not able to sustain that economic benefit, it is creating another legitimate reason to continue to get the support of the Chinese people. This is nationalism and nationalistic feelings. One thing about that is actually Taiwan, because it sees Taiwan not only as a renegade province but as a legacy of the Second World War. The Second World War is immediately connected to China's image of the so-called 100 years of humiliation.
It tries to justify what it does to the world as only asking for justice, because for the past 100 years, you have treated China with all kinds of unequal treaties. Now it is only asking for some fairness.
I hope you don't buy its argument, because this is all nonsense. If this is the case, why didn't it do that on day one of the PRC's establishment? It is only going to resort to this when other economic incentives can no longer be sustained. It's very easy to come up with all kinds of pretexts.
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You're done, even if you're not done.
Representative Tseng, I want to thank you once again for what's turning out to be an annual appearance before the committee. I don't know whether there will be a third annual appearance before the committee. We'll have to see. Some of us live in hope. On behalf of the committee, I just want to thank you for your enlightenment.
Just following up on Ms. Mathyssen's question, there is an effort to get the IPAC resolution to a point of unanimous consent. For those of you who have some influence with those who might make those decisions, we'd encourage you to do so.
Colleagues, this does bring to a close our threat assessment on the Indo-Pacific. Frankly, I think we are a little on the light side on this threat assessment. I would be interested in off-the-line conversations as to whether there should be a follow-up to a very valuable, useful understanding of not only the threat to Taiwan and the Indo-Pacific, but what the implications are for Canada.
Mr. Bezan, it has to be very quick.